Description
NAJ 28 (1989). The Pennine fells and industrial Airedale: these two contrasting landscapes linked by the Settle‑Carlisle railway reveal legacies of Robert Owen in Victorian and Modernist communal housing.
£10.00
52 pp., 45 ILLUSTRATIONS: Chris Broughton (plus Cover, left), Howard Eaglestone, Ian Gardner, Andrew Griffiths. TEXTS:
Traversing the summit at Ais Gill in Mallerstang and the Three Peaks of Penyghent, Ingleborough and Whernside, the railway is populated by the highest mainline stations in England, from which we mount this enchanting and rugged walking terrain. Lyric celebration is followed by a polemic to conclude the NAJ trilogy (25, 26, 28) which explores the 18th and 19th century phenomenon of the Model Village.
~ Patrick Eyres. Introduction.
~ Patrick Eyres. Et in Arcadia ego: the landscape of the Settle-Carlisle railway.
~ Patrick Eyres. Et in Utopia ego: Social Control, the architectural legacy of Robert Owen (explored through 19th century Saltaire and 20th century Quarry Hill, Leeds).
NAJ 28 (1989). The Pennine fells and industrial Airedale: these two contrasting landscapes linked by the Settle‑Carlisle railway reveal legacies of Robert Owen in Victorian and Modernist communal housing.
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